While not-really-robbed swimmer Ryan Lochte has since taken the spotlight off Solo’s controversial comments following the US women’s soccer team’s Olympics ouster, in which she called the Swedish team “a bunch of cowards” for the defensive playing style they employed in the quarterfinal, the goalie’s teammates are not letting her live it down.

Veterans Megan Rapinoe and Alex Morgan, with varying degrees of frustration, have spoken out against Solo’s immature, unsporting rant — perhaps an indication of a pent-up divide inside the team against Solo, a lightning rod for years for her prodigious talents and abrasive, criminal tendencies.

“I mean, really disappointed, to be honest,” Rapinoe said in an interview on NBC Sports on Thursday, via USA Today, when asked about how she reacted to Solo’s words. “That’s not our team, that’s not what this team has always been, that’s not what this team will be in the future. … We’re gracious, we’re humble and we play the game a certain way — whether we win or lose. And we’ve been on the winning side quite a bit, and when we find ourselves on the other side, we need to handle that graciously — and unfortunately that wasn’t the case.”

Morgan, the lone goal-scorer in that quarterfinal game, a heartbreaking, penalty-kick loss, played the gracious counterpart to Solo’s sore loser with remarks she posted on Twitter after the game.

Heartbroken for the team+staff, for our fans, for my family. Today's loss will make winning that much sweeter. Learn, grow, and never forget

In an interview with USA Today, Morgan tweaked Solo, ever so subtly, saying: “I feel like those are opinions I don’t share.”

Neither does Abby Wambach, the longtime face of US women’s soccer, who showed up — subtweeted, you might say — Solo with her compliments for former coach Pia Sundhage and the Swedes after their impressive upset.

Congratulations to Pia and the Swedish team for reaching the final. It's never how you get there, just as long as you do. #respect

Former US mainstay Julie Foudy took Wambach’s praise for Sweden’s strategy even further, calling Solo’s criticism of their style ridiculous.

“I shook my head,” Foudy told USA Today. “I thought, why is that necessary? There’s a long history and tradition with our national team of respecting others when you lose, so I don’t agree with it at all. I think it’s pretty obvious that Sweden took a tactic that most outmatched teams take in soccer. It’s been happening for centuries, in fact.”

And is it also obvious that Solo’s careless remarks took the spotlight away from her teammates?